(far right) and colleague with six student pilots destined for the
Royal Flying Corps, photographed at Hendon in August 1916. '', 2 July 1925 Grahame-White created a new company, the Grahame-White Aviation Company, taking control of more than of Colindale and converting it into what could be recognised as a proper modern airfield. The first occupants were
Horatio Barber's Aeronautical Syndicate Ltd and the
Bleriot flying school. From 9 to 16 September 1911, the first official UK
airmail was flown between Hendon and Windsor as part of the celebrations of the coronation of King George V. In 1912, the first
Aerial Derby started and ended at Hendon. An estimated three million people turned out across London, forming a human ring around the race circuit to see the aviators fly round the metropolis. An estimated two million of these Londoners had never seen an aircraft in flight before. At Hendon Aerodrome at least 45,000 people paid for admission to the enclosures. These annual events became as important as the Ascot and Epsom races during the London Season. By 1925, 100,000 people were coming to see the display, and it was so popular that there was talk of having to spread it over a few days. The first fatality at Hendon, reported in
The Times in May 1911, was Bernard Benson (aged 23). On 25 May 1911 he fell from an
ASL Valkyrie. Several flying schools were located at Hendon, including Grahame-White's, and another established in 1914 by the American aviator
George Beatty, in partnership with
Handley Page Ltd. These continued normal operation until late 1916. On 11 September 1916,
Cicely Ethel Wilkinson qualified as a pilot in a
Caudron biplane at the
Beatty School at the aerodrome for which she received
Royal Aero Club Aviator Certificate number 3522. She was possibly the only woman to qualify as a pilot in Britain during the
First World War. In November 1916, the War Office commandeered the flying schools, after which the aerodrome trained 490 pilots. Claude Grahame-White and other members of the
Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) mounted a night defence of London in 1915, constituting the first aerial defence of London. After the First World War, the first RAF "Pageant" was held at Hendon in 1920, and it soon became a regular event, known from 1925 as the Royal Air Force Display, and in 1938 as the
Empire Air Day. The aerodrome was briefly active during the
Battle of Britain, but for most of the
Second World War, was mainly used for transport activities, and flying dignitaries to and from London. RAF Hendon had three crossed runways with magnetic headings of: QDM 339 – 3975 x 150 feet QDM 280 – 3000 x 150 feet QDM 014 – 3060 x 150 feet These runways were removed by 1969. ==Manufacturing at Hendon==